STATE of Washington, Respondent,
v.
Kurt L. JONES, Petitioner.
Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.
*1063 Thоmas Doyle, Hansville, Patricia Pethick, Tacoma, for Petitioner.
Gary P. Burleson, Mason County Prosecutor, Carol L. Case, Deputy, Shelton, for Respondent.
MADSEN, J.
Defendant Kurt Jones was stopped for a traffic violation and subsequently arrested on an outstanding warrant. After Jones was arrested, deputies sеarched his passenger's purse and seized a firearm found in the purse. Prior to trial, Jones moved to suppress the firearm. The trial court denied Jones's motion, and Jones was convicted of unlawful possession of a firearm. Jones appealed, arguing that the police unlawfully searchеd his passenger's purse. The Court of Appeals affirmed Jones's conviction. We hold that the search of a passenger's purse is not justified incident to a driver's arrest absent evidence that the passenger's purse was in the immediate control of the driver.
We reverse.
*1064 FACTS
On November 15, 1997, about midnight, Deputy Kenneth McGill stоpped Jones for a traffic violation. Moments later Deputy Michael Hayes arrived at the scene. McGill learned from the dispatcher that Jones had an outstanding arrest warrant. McGill arrested Jones and placed him in his patrol car.
Jones's girl friend, Marie Gale, was a passenger in thе vehicle. Deputy Hayes approached Ms. Gale on the passenger side of the vehicle and asked for her identification, which she produced from her purse. A computer check indicated she had no outstanding warrants.
After Deputy McGill removed Jones from the car, the officеrs directed Ms. Gale to exit the vehicle so it could be searched. After she exited, Deputy Hayes told Ms. Gale to return her purse to the car. She complied. Deputy Hayes placed her in his patrol car but advised that she was not under arrest.
The deputies then searched Jones's car, including Ms. Gale's purse. They found a firearm in her purse. Dispatch reported that the gun was stolen. Jones was advised of his Miranda rights. Miranda v. Arizona,
ANALYSIS
The first issue presented in this case is whether the defendant has standing to challenge the search of his passenger's purse incident to his own arrest. Although automatic standing has been the subjeсt of some controversy,[1] and has been abandoned by the U.S. Supreme Court, it "still maintains a presence in Washington." State v. Williams,
It is well settled that article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution provides greater protection to individual privacy rights than the Fourth Amendment. E.g. State v. Hendrickson,
In this case, the alleged intrusion of which Mr. Jones complains is the search of Ms. Gale's purse. Mr. Jones does not claim ownership of the purse and therefore he lacks standing to challenge the search unless he is entitled to assert automatic standing. A person may rely on the automatic standing doctrine only if the challenged police action produced the evidence sought to be used against him. Williams,
As to the second requirement, possession may be actual or constructive to support a criminal charge. State v. Callahan,
The Court of Appeals found that Jones had satisfied the requirements of automatic standing. Nevertheless, that court went on to suggest that the continued viability of automatic standing is in doubt after this court's decision in State v. Williams,
In Williams the defendant challenged an officer's entry into a third party's residence. The contraband at issue was discovered during a search of the defendant pursuant to an arrest warrant. Williams argued that he was entitled to rely on automatic standing to challenge entry into the third party's residence. This court disagreed, finding an insufficient nexus between the contraband found during a search of the defendant's person incident to his arrest on a warrant, and the officer's entry into the third party's apartment.
Williams was denied automatic standing because the challenged police action in that case, an officer's entry into a third party's residence, was not the action that resulted in a search. Rather, the entry facilitated the defendant's arrest on a valid arrest warrant. The search which revealed contraband was conducted incidеnt to that arrest. In other words, the arrest, not the entry, led to the discovery of evidence which supported the subsequent possession charge. Williams was not placed in the position of having to claim ownership of contraband or admit to any criminal conduct to challenge the search of his person. Indeed, his possession of contraband was wholly unrelated to whether police lawfully entered a third party's apartment. Williams merely reiterated the premise underlying automatic standing that the rule is limited to situations where a defendant faces the risk that statements made at a supрression hearing will be used against him later as impeachment evidence. Automatic standing is not a "vehicle to collaterally attack every police search that results in a seizure of contraband or evidence of a crime." Williams,
Unlike Williams, there is a direct relationship in this case between the challenged police action and the evidence used against the defendant. Because Jones must choose to either admit he possessed the gun to assert a privacy interest, thereby admitting the essential element in the case against him, or claim he did not possess the weapon, thereby losing his ability to challenge the search, he is entitled to assert automatic standing to challenge the search. This case presents the "self-incrimination dilemma" we were concerned about in Simpson. There we said:
without automatic standing, a defendant will ordinarily be deterred from asserting a possessory interest in illegally seized evidence because of the risk that statements made at the suppression hearing will later be used to incriminate him albeit under the guise of impeachment. For a defendant, the only solution to this dilemma is to relinquish his constitutional right to testify in his own defense.
Simpson,
Accordingly, we hold that Mr. Jоnes was entitled to rely on automatic standing to challenge the search of Ms. Gale's purse.
The next issue is whether police conducted an impermissible search when they ordered Ms. Gale, a nonarrested passenger, to leave her purse in the vehicle to be searched incident to the driver Jones's arrest. A warrantless search is per se unreasonable *1066 under article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution. State v. White,
As a threshold matter, a searсh incident to arrest is a well-recognized exception to the warrant requirement. State v. Vrieling,
The State maintains that, unlike a locked container, Ms. Gale's purse is no more than an unlocked container in the passenger compartment and therefore can be searched regardless of its ownership. See Fladebo,
We recently addressed the question of whether items belonging to a passenger may be searched incident to the arrest of a driver. State v. Parker,
Parker consolidated three cases in which passengers were searched incident to the driver's arrest. We found determinative the fact that none of the passengers searched in the three consolidated cases were under arrest at the time of the search.
In our review of our search incident to arrest jurisprudence we do not find, and the State has not cited to, a single authority for the proposition that the arrest of one person, without more, provides the authority to search another, nonarrested individual.
Parker,
We sрecifically rejected application of the search incident to arrest exception to all those associated with, or in the vicinity of, the arrestee, holding that such a search is unlawful if based solely on a driver's arrest. Id. at 498,
Here, police searched the nonarrested passenger's purse. Accordingly, we must first determine whether the item searched was a personal effect of thе passenger and whether *1067 officers knew the item belonged to the nonarrested person. Parker,
It is undisputed that the purse belonged to Gale, who was not under arrest. She produced her wallet and identification from the purse when she gave it to the officer. In addition, she had the purse on her shoulder when she exited the vehicle. It is also undisputed that the officer knew thе purse belonged to Ms. Gale rather than Mr. Jones.
The next question is whether the purse was in Jones's immediate control, thus allowing him to hide contraband in it or gain access to a weapon. In these circumstances, as we explained, a passenger's property may be searched incident to the driver's arrest.
In State v. Hunnel,
As in Hunnel, there is no evidence in this case that the purse was in Jones's immediate control. Therefore, the officer's search of Ms. Gale's purse violated article I, section 7.
The State alternatively argues that general concerns for officer safety justified thе search of the passenger's purse, regardless of whether the search was valid as incident to Jones's arrest. But this court requires more than a bare assertion of potential danger to officers to validate such a search. Parker,
The facts here are substantially different from those in Kennedy and Wilkinson. Here two officers were present when Jones was arrested. The passenger had no outstanding warrants and the officers had no history with her. The officers did not testify to furtive gestures or to any other suspicious or threatening conduct. There was no claim that the оfficers feared for their safety. Under the facts of this case, we conclude that the search of Gale's purse cannot be justified on the basis of concerns for officer safety.
CONCLUSION
We hold that Jones had standing to challenge the search of the nonarrested passenger's belongings. We also hold that the search of passenger Gale's purse was not justified as a search incident to Jones's arrest. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
ALEXANDER, C.J., SMITH, JOHNSON, SANDERS, IRELAND, BRIDGE, CHAMBRERS, and OWENS, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] A plurality of this court adhered to the automatic standing rule as a matter of statе constitutional law in State v. Simpson,
